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Pastel Paintings And Landmines: 7 Of The Weirdest Top State Exports

Whiskey’s a top Kentucky export, and lobsters rank first in Maine, but that probably doesn’t come as a surprise. Many of the U.S.’s top state exports only serve to reinforce state-by-state caricatures.

It’s fitting that Rhode Island’s 11th-strongest seller is sailboats, that meat reigns in the plains states and that Nevada’s second biggest moneymaker is coin-operated games.

But the U.S. balance sheet also has some surprising line items. We’re talking standard line items like “animal (not fish) guts." Here are some of the oddest, the grossest and the most startling:

7. Dog And Cat Food

Kansas rakes in $163 million a year in foreign pet food sales. It's No. 8 on the state export list and No. 14 on South Dakota’s.

6. Livers, Roes And Milt

It makes sense that Alaska’s top 15 exports are fish and minerals. But this particular portion of the fish is responsible for so much dough that it has its own category. The sixth-largest seller brought in $290 million last year.

5. Hand Drawings And Pastel Paintings

New York’s second-biggest export earned the state $7.043 billion in 2017. Original sculptures and statuary ($1.197 billion) and antiques older than 100 years ($476 million) ranked Nos. 7 and 15, respectively.

3. Perfumes And Toilet Waters

The niche market of aromatics made Florida $618 million in 2017. The products comprise the state’s eighth-largest export category.

2. Medical Needles And Catheters

There’s nothing like a Minnesota catheter. The commodity is the state’s top foreign seller and last year brought in $798 million. It also ranked No. 5 in Massachusetts and No. 7 in Mississippi.

1. Bodily Parts And Fluids

If you thought Minnesota couldn't be any weirder, "artifical parts of the body" are its No. 10 export.

“Antisera and other blood fractions” is the No. 3 export in Kentucky, No 4. in North Carolina and No. 12 in Illinois. Between the three states, alone, the product accounted for $2.847 billion in U.S. foreign sales.

"Human blood or animal blood” is a $183-million business in Wisconsin (No. 14) and $33 million in Montana (No. 11).